Greytown is a small town on State Highway 2, over the Rimutakas in Wairarapa. We've driven
through it numerous times on the way to Masterton, Castlepoint, and Napier, but
never stopped to see what's there.
Thanks to a voucher in Treatme, however, all that was about
to change. With a night's accommodation at the White Swan hotel, with dinner
thrown in, we decided to take advantage of the offer over the Labour Day
weekend. We set out with the plan to get there in time for lunch, and found
ourselves in Bar Saluté, a tapas/pizza restaurant in the middle of town. We
decided tapas was the way to go as we would be dining again in the evening, so
had the asparagus, squid, duck prosciutto and halloumi. These were all very
well presented – no ordinary tapas, each was a mini gourmet meal in itself. We then ruined everything by being tempted to
the pudding menu, and these turned out to be quite substantial – a vanilla crème
and lemon fritters.
We checked into the hotel, then set out to explore the
centre of Greytown, which has a number of shops of the variety that sell things
that no-one actually needs, and admired the historic tree.
In the evening, we had dinner at the hotel – scallops followed
by deconstructed beef Wellington, and duck liver pâté followed by risotto. We
both had the lemon tart for pudding, and by this time were feeling completely
stuffed.
The next day we went out to breakfast at the Main Street Deli before looking round the historic village artefacts at the Cobblestones museum, which included an old schoolhouse. This had the primary school curriculum
with exam questions on the wall, as well as rules for teachers, both of which
exhibited some quaintly old-fashioned values. There was also a typical cottage from the 19th century, which housed 10 people in less space than you'd normally reserve for feline oscillation.
We then drove up to the Waiohine Gorge for a walk which
involved crossing on a swing bridge. There is a cautionary notice by the bridge
which advises that it swings in high wind conditions. The breeze was beginning
to pick up so we didn’t hang about but got across, and then back, without lollygagging too much. The views from the middle of the bridge were pretty spectacular,
up and downstream of the Waiohine river.
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